AN IRAQI mother-of-one is appealing to the Government to let her Baghdad-based police officer husband join her in Ireland.
THE DEMISE of Moldova’s communist government has been hailed as “a relief” by a prominent representative in Ireland.
English language schools in Ireland are bracing themselves for uncertainty as the sector struggles against the credit crunch, competition with a weak pound and fears over the swine flu pandemic.
The Festival of World Cultures, set to take place over the weekend of 29–30 August, is now in its ninth year and is firmly established in the summer events calendar.
Ireland could end up as the new “red light district of Europe” if an urgent review of prostitution laws is not carried out, Fine Gael’s immigration spokesman has warned.
A NIGERIAN MAN separated from his wife following his deportation has appealed to be reunited with her.
They are young, ambitious emigrants - but their country’s leaders don’t seem to want them back. Following Lithuania’s decision to ban information on homosexuality in schools, CATHERINE REILLY meets gay Lithuanians in Dublin who’ve suffered
Charlie Johnson meets Bimbo John Oluwayose of Bimdoc Enterprises, one of the first retailers to meet the demands of Ireland’s growing African community
In previous weeks I’ve discussed some of the reasons why we must take more individual responsibility in addressing climate change. But I am also painfully aware that there is only so much that we can do as individuals. Much more must be done by the world’s
The last flight of my long journey finally touched down, and at last – after stopping off in England, Thailand, Cambodia and Singapore – I was in Australia.
Back in Dublin – and I’ve hardly felt like I’ve been away. The Irish Times is there on the paper stand every morning at the corner shop, and the city is the same as ever, except maybe the slowly growing roof of Aviva Stadium and the new Samuel
Emilia Marchelewska recalls her childhood in Poland, where a single road separated its inhabitants into two separate lives
Robert Mugabe has left an appalling legacy in Africa. But he’s not the only one. So why is the Zimbabwean leader demonised by the west as a dictator beyond all others, asks Gearóid Ó Colmáin
Le Michal Boleslav Mechura nó Micilín Mac Mìchúra
The raspberry, the first soft fruit of summer, deserves a transformation other than mere jam.
The Cambodian government’s cancellation of a beauty pageant featuring landmine victims has come as a surprise to many.
As young people all over the country come down from the high of Oxegen 2009, there is no need to hang up the wellies just yet.
The vintage prose of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart allows western readers a glimpse into Nigeria’s New Yam festival. In fact, your Nigerian neighbours could be celebrating it next door. But what’s it all about?